Chuck Kelley, president of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, said recently, “If we were to get up a trip to Paris and really push it, we might get a half dozen students to go with us. However, if we announced a mission trip to Afghanistan and told the students they had to buy their own flak jackets, we’d have to turn some away. Today’s students respond to a great challenge.”
Abraham Lincoln attended church with a friend in Springfield. Afterwards, the friend asked the future president what he thought of the message. “It was all right,” he said, “but it was not a great sermon.” Asked what made him say that, Lincoln said, “The pastor said many fine things, but he did not ask us to do a great thing.”
Joe Brown, long-time pastor of Charlotte’s Hickory Grove Baptist Church, returned from a mission trip to a difficult area of the world and shared this experience with his congregation.
“At ‘The Edge’ they have an underground church…. They meet on different nights, and when they reach the number of 10 or 12, they split the church because it causes too much attention.”
“They have a man…. He’s not the pastor. He’s not a teacher. He’s an usher. He volunteers to go down into the center of the city, and he stands there. The members of his church will ride down there and he’ll tell them where they’re meeting and when they’re meeting, because the telephone lines are monitored…. There was such a man in this city, and the government found out about him. They arrested him. He lost his job. When he lost his job, he lost his housing. He lost his medical benefits. He lost everything he had. He was beaten and put into prison.”
“Another man stepped forward and took the job. And he was turned in, and he was beaten and put into prison and lost everything he had.”
“Someone traveling with us looked at the house-church pastor and said, ‘I suppose you have great difficulty in filling that job.'”
“He said, ‘Oh no, we don’t have difficulty in filling that job. We have a waiting list.'”